Here are the contents of the package.
3-Tee Claw's
5-Elastic Cords
3-Tee's of various length
No actual written instructions unless you scan the QR Code on the back of the box.

It was pretty simple to figure out how to attach the elastic cord to the Tee Claw.

One of their tees fit snuggly into the Tee Claw. In the image above where you see underneath the Tee Claw. If you push down the point of the tee will press up on the center of the rubber part of the Tee Claw. I can see if someone pushed hard enough they would break the rubber on the bottom of the Tee Claw. Just something to be aware of when using the Tee Claw. No need to really push down on the actual tee that hard.

I tested out one of my plastic tees. Because the plastic tees are less wide near the tip of the tee they don't fit as snuggly. The Tee Claw has a deep enough hole to support the tee. It's just not as secure as when using the wood tees they provide.

I suspect the tee will sit higher than normal since you are not actually putting the tee into the ground. So I'd probably recommend using a shorter tee. That is just a guess right now. More will come when I try this out at the range.

The quality of the Tee Claw looks pretty good. The hard plastic is pretty strong and doesn't bend or break when I put some force on the claws that hold into the mat. I am interested in seeing how well it holds up on iron strokes. On the back of the box it shows you can just place a ball on the Tee Claw with no tee. That might be the ultimate durability test for this product.

The Tee Claw came with three claws, four lanyards and three tees. The lanyards hook under the claw.

My first impression was positive. You get to fine tune your own tee height. One issue I have with rubber tees is they are never the right height. If it is too tall, I tend to get under the ball with the driver and sky the shot. Too low, and the ball flight gets affected.

I put the Tee Claw on a mat I have at home and used it to get my tee height. Then I cut a couple of tees down to the right height for the range. The other tees, I scored so I could break them easily at the range or use them in grass when the snow melt.

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One thing I thought of, but haven't tried yet, is using a second claw as an anchor. At the indoor range I go to, the mat is very large, so it may be hard to anchor the cord with a tee as they show in the Tee Claw videos. You can use a second claw as the anchor point. I will try to get a picture of that when I go to the range today.

One thing I thought of, but haven't tried yet, is using a second claw as an anchor. At the indoor range I go to, the mat is very large, so it may be hard to anchor the cord with a tee as they show in the Tee Claw videos. You can use a second claw as the anchor point. I will try to get a picture of that when I go to the range today.

That's exactly what I had to do on Friday and it worked. I also experimented with securing the Tee Claw to my shoes.

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I just wanted to pop in and give my first impressions of the Tee Claw.

10 hours ago, billchao said:

The lanyard just holds it so the Tee Claw doesn't fly off, right? I assume it won't matter if you string it up perpendicular to your target line as opposed to parallel to it?

Right, Bill. The lanyard loop goes on the bottom of the peg underneath the tee and is there to hang onto the thing for dear life if it manages to fly away. Getting the loop onto the peg isn't the easiest thing in the world to do, so while I haven't hit it with a 100 mph (*cough* 95 mph *cough*) driver yet, I don't imagine it will come off, especially since it's basically a fail-safe for the claw part of the Tee Claw. Since the other reviewers have covered the most important views, I'll add an underside shot so you can see better what I mean:

(cue Wayne's World "EXTREME CLOSEUP" sound drop)

I tried out the Tee Claw by twisting it into my carpet and the device gets in there really well; almost too well. I was using it for some putting alignment since I finally had some time to pick up golf clubs today and it does not want to give up the grip on the fibers at all. It takes some finagling to get out. I care more about my carpet than I do a golf mat, so I didn't just pull it out by force, but I'm curious to see how easily the little serrated teeth come out from a mat when I'm done at the range. Regardless, I don't see this thing flying away at all: if you hit it hard enough to rip the claw out of the ground and it still has enough force to pull the peg off of the tight lanyard loop, my suspicion is that you've hit it hard enough to break it and weren't using it correctly anyway.

So my first impression is that I'm surprised by how well built the device is for something so small. I think it's going to be very useful. One question I have about the product is that I wonder why the plug on the bottom is sealed flat as opposed to having a hole in it for the tee to ass through? Is that for consistency of tee height and to encourage you to leave the tee in shallow so it will pop out instead of breaking inside the device? I suspect the second one. They include three tees of varying lengths to get you started, but you'll have to mess about with tee lengths more than I would have hoped (not that you can get a tee into a mat too far anyway, and you can always poke a hole in the plug, which is a somewhat flexible rubber or silicone by the looks of it. In any event, I'm very excited to take this out on the range in the next few days now that the snow is gone and the weather is looking up!

10 hours ago, boogielicious said:

One thing I thought of, but haven't tried yet, is using a second claw as an anchor. At the indoor range I go to, the mat is very large, so it may be hard to anchor the cord with a tee as they show in the Tee Claw videos. You can use a second claw as the anchor point. I will try to get a picture of that when I go to the range today.

I've used the second claw as an anchor for some putting drills so far, and I think that's a great way to go. I would use a tee only if I had to get the lanyard farther under the mat to create tension for a drill or something, and didn't want to scratch up the other claw.

9 hours ago, newtogolf said:

Yes, to keep it from flying away. In the simulator, it flying away wouldn't be much of a problem but on a regular range it would be.

If you had mesh shoes, you could screw the Tee Claw on there and pretend you have one of the fancy BOA fastening systems on your golf spikes!

Right, Bill. The lanyard loop goes on the bottom of the peg underneath the tee and is there to hang onto the thing for dear life if it manages to fly away.

That's what thought, thanks for the response. I've been looking for something I can use at home so I can practice with my driver in my net and I think this fits the bill pretty well.

1 hour ago, dkolo said:

I wonder why the plug on the bottom is sealed flat as opposed to having a hole in it for the tee to ass through? Is that for consistency of tee height and to encourage you to leave the tee in shallow so it will pop out instead of breaking inside the device? I suspect the second one.

I'm assuming you meant "pass" through?

But I agree, I would think it's to keep the tees from breaking. I've used those rubber tees that you can stick a real tee into and tees break off inside them all the time. I guess keeping the insertion point shallow will cause you to launch the tee more than breaking it, but then losing a bunch of tees down the range could be a pain in the ass, too.

That's what thought, thanks for the response. I've been looking for something I can use at home so I can practice with my driver in my net and I think this fits the bill pretty well.

I'm assuming you meant "pass" through?

But I agree, I would think it's to keep the tees from breaking. I've used those rubber tees that you can stick a real tee into and tees break off inside them all the time. I guess keeping the insertion point shallow will cause you to launch the tee more than breaking it, but then losing a bunch of tees down the range could be a pain in the ass, too.

Oh heavens, haha. That's a typo for the ages.

It occurs to me, and this is something I'll try once I take it to the range, that if the tees do wind up flying down range and that becomes a problem, it might be a good idea to put the tee in a loop from a second Tee Claw next to it to hang on to the tee itself. But that's getting ahead of myself.

It occurs to me, and this is something I'll try once I take it to the range, that if the tees do wind up flying down range and that becomes a problem, it might be a good idea to put the tee in a loop from a second Tee Claw next to it to hang on to the tee itself. But that's getting ahead of myself.

Yes that's what it's for - why it's sealed. you don't want to stick the tee into the mat. It could not only break the tee but break the Tee Claw, too.

Also, I think most of your tees will flick up or even back slightly. I don't know how often they'll travel too far down the range that you can't bend over and pick them up. Most tees when I play golf go to the right (perpendicular to target line), up, or back slightly.

The Tee Claw came with three claws, four lanyards and three tees. The lanyards hook under the claw.

My first impression was positive. You get to fine tune your own tee height. One issue I have with rubber tees is they are never the right height. If it is too tall, I tend to get under the ball with the driver and sky the shot. Too low, and the ball flight gets affected.

I put the Tee Claw on a mat I have at home and used it to get my tee height. Then I cut a couple of tees down to the right height for the range. The other tees, I scored so I could break them easily at the range or use them in grass when the snow melt.

Hi, my name is John. I'm the CEO and Co-Founder of Tee Claw. Love your review. I want to answer some of the questions you brought up. Great questions. I use tees I pick up at the range or find on the course when I'm practicing. We package with 3 tees just to show different heights.

On 2/7/2016 at 0:47 PM, saevel25 said:

My Tee Claw arrived on Saturday.

Here is the packaging. Simple in design.

Here are the contents of the package.
3-Tee Claw's
5-Elastic Cords
3-Tee's of various length
No actual written instructions unless you scan the QR Code on the back of the box.

It was pretty simple to figure out how to attach the elastic cord to the Tee Claw.

One of their tees fit snuggly into the Tee Claw. In the image above where you see underneath the Tee Claw. If you push down the point of the tee will press up on the center of the rubber part of the Tee Claw. I can see if someone pushed hard enough they would break the rubber on the bottom of the Tee Claw. Just something to be aware of when using the Tee Claw. No need to really push down on the actual tee that hard.

I tested out one of my plastic tees. Because the plastic tees are less wide near the tip of the tee they don't fit as snuggly. The Tee Claw has a deep enough hole to support the tee. It's just not as secure as when using the wood tees they provide.

I suspect the tee will sit higher than normal since you are not actually putting the tee into the ground. So I'd probably recommend using a shorter tee. That is just a guess right now. More will come when I try this out at the range.

The quality of the Tee Claw looks pretty good. The hard plastic is pretty strong and doesn't bend or break when I put some force on the claws that hold into the mat. I am interested in seeing how well it holds up on iron strokes. On the back of the box it shows you can just place a ball on the Tee Claw with no tee. That might be the ultimate durability test for this product.

Looking forward to trying these out.

The top of the Tee Claw was designed to be the same size as a real tee. We did a lot of testing with hitting the golf ball off the top of the Tee Claw without a tee. If you are someone who strikes a ball good then you can hit the ball cleanly off the Tee Claw. Those like myself, would probably break the Tee Claw. It is made of a durable plastic but not indestructible. If you hit anything with a hard metal object with the right force it will no doubt break. I wouldn't recommend hitting directly off the top of the tee claw with irons. I have hit my hybrids and woods with short Tees.

On 2/21/2016 at 7:00 AM, boogielicious said:

One thing I thought of, but haven't tried yet, is using a second claw as an anchor. At the indoor range I go to, the mat is very large, so it may be hard to anchor the cord with a tee as they show in the Tee Claw videos. You can use a second claw as the anchor point. I will try to get a picture of that when I go to the range today.

There a few ways to best anchor the Tee Claw. The lanyard was initially made to keep the Tee Claw from flying down range if you miss hit the Tee Claw and it becomes dislodged from the mat. The second is how it can be used as an alignment and visual aid. Check out our Facebook Page and Instagram page for some great videos and photos. https://www.facebook.com/teeclawllc/photos_stream

On 2/21/2016 at 7:37 AM, billchao said:

The lanyard just holds it so the Tee Claw doesn't fly off, right? I assume it won't matter if you string it up perpendicular to your target line as opposed to parallel to it?

That's what thought, thanks for the response. I've been looking for something I can use at home so I can practice with my driver in my net and I think this fits the bill pretty well.

I'm assuming you meant "pass" through?

But I agree, I would think it's to keep the tees from breaking. I've used those rubber tees that you can stick a real tee into and tees break off inside them all the time. I guess keeping the insertion point shallow will cause you to launch the tee more than breaking it, but then losing a bunch of tees down the range could be a pain in the ass, too.

This is a great question as to why we sealed off the bottom rubber piece where the lanyard attaches. We launched in January 2015. When we launched and for months leading up to the launch we did a lot of testing with the Tee Claw. What we found was very important. When we would push a tee pass the closed rubber end, we learned a couple of things. First, if you push to far through the Tee Claw will not attach properly to some of the mats.

The second and most important thing we found was when we push the tee through the rubber end, it had a tendency to cause the Tee Claws to break one of the claws fairly easily. Basic science showed us that when all the force from the club is coming forward either the tee would break or the tee claw leg. You have to let the Tee do what it is supposed to. When you hit off of grass and a tee flies out it is ok. With the Tee Claw is you want a shorter length Tee, us a smaller tee. Do not push through the bottom rubber piece. Once we found this out and started showing people we had a great response.

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Yes, to keep it from flying away. In the simulator, it flying away wouldn't be much of a problem but on a regular range it would be.

Tees will fly out. If you were hitting on the grass portion at the range and the tee flew out what would you do. Put in another tee. No difference hitting off a mat at the range or grass. Here is a bag of tees I collected at the range and on the course that I use just for practicing. I don't care if these tees break or go down range. I can also break tees to get the height I want. They were free which is great.

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I know it's a little late, but I said no majors before the year started and am sticking to that, although I hope I'm wrong. I think his best shot will be at Pebble. I do think he will finish in the top-3 there but I think one of the big hitters (DJ, Koepka, Rory) will power through.
PGA wins, I'll go with 2. I think he'll win one of his normal events (Bay Hill or Memorial) and then win a FedEx event. I think he will get into the top 30 with a lot of top-10 finishes this year to play The TOUR.

It hasn't been too cold in NC, but it has been as wet as I can remember. I have played once this week, and it has rained every day, and is supposed to rain this weekend. I've played less this winter than any winter in recent memory. Hurry up spring!

Also happening on the LPGA:
The full videos doesn't show it, but I'm wondering if Olson gave a sign or something to Jutanugarn not to mark here. Jutanugarn goes to start marking her ball, it looks like, and she looks over at Olson, motioning something, and immediately stops. This seems awfully close to the line, if not over it.
LPGA apparently deleted a tweet about this, too:
Yikes.

I chose time because a lot of people I know don't want to play because it's too long for them and they don't have the time. Also here in Canada, Quebec accessibility is starting to be an issue, probably more than in the U.S. A lot of golf course are sold to property developers and it's starting to limit the choices of course at close range. I don't think money is an issue, there is always deals you can find to play golf at a discount and other activities cost as much as golf these days.